Ken Dixon's Blog-O-Rama

Ken Dixon's Blog-O-Rama

Connecticut politics is a contact sport

Archive for July, 2009

Gov. Rell Gets All Caloric With Don Williams

 If you think bipartisan budget talks are going well, consider Jodi Rell’s veto this afternoon of Senate President Pro Tem Don Williams’s pet bill, which would have required chain restaurants to post caloric information. It’s as if Williams was behind the window at Mickey D’s drive-thru and the governor just motored by in the Town Car and gave him the finger while shouting the words “personal responsibility.”.

Sen. Jonathan Harris, D-West Hartford, co-chairman of the Public Health Committee, said Rell’s reasons for vetoing the bill show little knowledge with the legislation. He said that lawmakers worked with businesses so the signs could conform to ones they’re already using in Nw York City and California. The effective date was pushed back to July 1, 2010 to allow Congress time to create a nationwide law. He said that at the rate the nation’s obesity rate is ballooning, particular among fat kids who’ll become fat adults, the potential savings in healthcare costs is huge.

The bill is a possible target for a veto override later this month though. It got 89 votes in the House, with opposition for some reason from urban lawmakers. They need 101 to override and there are 114 House Democrats. So that’s a challenge to House Speaker Chris Donovan. There were only six “no” votes in the Senate, which is run by Democrats 24-12.

Posted in General | 2 Comments

Run To State Offices This Afternoon Before “Furvacations” Kick In

It’s no secret that it’s practically impossible to get a live body on the phone in state offices the afternoon before long holidays. It’ll be even worse this Independence Day holiday because Friday’s paid day off bookends another unpaid furlough day on Monday (part of the attempt to cut expenses in the budget crisis) for many state offices, although not state parks or courts.

The Blogster recommends that you make your calls to whatever agency or department you need before 3 p.m. today, because it’s a crap shoot after that if you want to accomplish anything. Monday’s forced day of rest is being called a “Furcation” day, among a certain strata of state employees.

Posted in General | Add a comment

Happy Anniversary John “Why Should I Resign If I’ve Done Nothing Wrong?” Rowland

The Blogster misses John Rowland, the disgraced former governor who served 10 months in the federal slam for accepting luxury air charters from Key Air of Oxford. His resignation was effective July 1, 2004 after a wild seven months of denials, public requests for “fairness and transparency,” a House Committee of Inquiry and a state Supreme Court ruling that essentially forced his resignation.
 Rowland’s buddy William Tomasso (30-month sentence on conspiracy to commit bribery) got a no-bid $56-million contract to build the Middletown jail for boys called the Connecticut Juvenile Training School. Rowland’s story was typical of our age, although unlike so many, cheating on his wife was not part of the equation.
 So did you know that Rowland will not be getting a $50,000-a-year pension when he turns 55 in May of 2012. Nope, according to the applicable state statute, listed below, he’ll start at $51,500 and will enjoy an annual cost-of-living-raise of about 3 percent.

For ironists among Blog-o-rama readers, the 1998 law was the same year that Rowland turned down a pay raise to $150,000 because at the time, it was the spring of a gubernatorial-election year and Barbara Kennelly, then a congresswoman from Connecticut’s First District, was perceived as a big threat. Her candidacy was very weak, to put it mildly and he romped in November. 
 

Here is the complete law from the Connecticut General Statutes
 Note subsection c)
 
Sec. 3-2a. Pensions for Governors and their spouses. (a) Any person who has served as Governor of this state, having been elected to said office or having exercised the powers and authority of said office on the death or resignation of the Governor, and who has attained the age of fifty-five, shall receive an annual pension equal to five thousand dollars for each year or fraction thereof he so served, payable in equal monthly installments for the remainder of his life, provided no such pension shall be payable for any period during which such person serves as, or exercises the powers and authority of, Governor or any other salaried office in the state government. The state shall provide compensation to the surviving spouse of any Governor or former Governor at the rate of one-half the pension to which he was entitled under the provisions of this section or would have been entitled had he survived to the age of fifty-five, payable monthly in equal installments for the remainder of such surviving spouse’s life. If any former Governor or surviving spouse of a former Governor is eligible for a pension under any other provision of state law, the amount of such pension shall be deducted from the pension payable under this section.

      (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), the increase in the annual pension for Governors and in the compensation to surviving spouses of Governors, effective on January 1, 1979, shall not apply to the Governor in office on July 7, 1977, or to such Governor’s spouse.

      (c) On July 1, 1998, and on July first of each subsequent year, any person who has served as Governor of this state on and after January 6, 1999, having been elected to said office or having exercised the powers and authority of said office on the death or resignation of the Governor, and who has attained the age of fifty-five, shall be entitled, in addition to the annual pension to which such Governor is entitled under subsection (a) of this section, to an annual cost of living allowance which reflects the increase, if any, in the national consumer price index for urban wage earners and clerical workers for the previous twelve-month period, provided such cost of living allowance shall not exceed three per cent. Such cost of living allowance shall be computed on the basis of the combined retirement salary and cost of living allowances, if any, to which such person was entitled as of the June thirtieth immediately preceding.

 
Posted in General | 3 Comments

Surprise, Rell Vetoes Democratic Budget

It’s 11:30 a.m. and word just arrived from Gov. Jodi Rell’s press office, minus Spokesman Chris Cooper, whose last day was yesterday as he took the retirement Incentive Package, that the governor has officially vetoed the Democrats’ truncated budget that was voted mostly along party lines last week,. It’s anticlimactic, because for our purposes, the battling bipartisan budgeteers are back, again, at the Governor’s Residence, talking compromises. About the only thing we’re sure they agree on is a ban on statements on whatever progress they may be making.

Posted in General | Add a comment
Page 3 of 3123

Recent Comments

Categories

Twitter Updates

Archives

February 2012
M T W T F S S
« Jan «-»  
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829